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US Army, FAA and NTSB brief Senators on recent near-miss incidents involving helicopter

Senior U.S. Officials will answer senators' questions Wednesday regarding an incident that occurred on May 1, when two passenger flights were forced to cancel landings at Reagan Washington National Airport due to a nearby Army helicopter.

A spokesperson for Senator Jerry Moran, who chairs the panel, announced that Brigadier-General Matthew Braman, Director of Army Aviation, Chris Rocheleau, Acting Federal Aviation Administration Head, and Jennifer Homendy, Chair of the National Transportation Safety Board, will attend a closed door roundtable discussion with the Senate Commerce Subcommittee Aviation to discuss the near miss incident.

A Black Hawk helicopter and an American Airlines passenger plane collided near Reagan on January 29. 67 people were killed.

Separately, on Monday, two dozen U.S. Senators asked the inspectors general for the Pentagon and Transportation Departments to open audits as a response to the ongoing issues with coordination between the Army and the air traffic control at Reagan Airport (DCA) and the collision that occurred.

Moran's Office said that senators would also receive an "updated status on military helicopter activities in and around DCA airspace."

Rocheleau announced last week that the agency has barred the Army's training and priority transport flights following the incident.

Rocheleau stated that "we've closed those until we feel comfortable with what we refer to as new rules of the roads."

Homendy's participation was confirmed by the NTSB. The FAA or Army did not respond immediately to comments.

After the deadly collision, seven Democratic Senators introduced on Thursday sweeping legislation to improve air safety.

Last month, the Army informed the Associated Press that the military air traffic controllers had lost contact with the helicopter as it approached the Pentagon during the flight on May 1.

Both Delta Air Lines Flights 1671 and Republic Airways Flight 5825 (an Embraer 170 which had departed Boston) were forced to do go-arounds because of the Army helicopter nearby.

After the incident, the U.S. Army suspended helicopter operations in the area of the Pentagon on May 5.

Separately, the FAA revealed last month that a hotline between the Pentagon and air traffic control at Reagan had been inoperative since March 2022. (Reporting and editing by William Maclean, David Shepardson)

(source: Reuters)